Ireland Travel Guide

Ireland Travel Guide

Ireland in 2026 is a country with one of the most immediately recognizable cultures in the world - the pubs, the landscape, the conversation - and one of the more complex travel experiences in Western Europe. Dublin is a European capital with real depth and a cost of living that now rivals London. The west coast (Connemara, County Clare, the Dingle Peninsula) has the landscape that most people imagine when they think of Ireland. The island is small enough to drive end-to-end in a day and large enough to spend weeks in without running out of things. It rains consistently but rarely heavily, and the light on a clear day after rain is what every Irish landscape painter was trying to capture.

Updated 2026

Overview and Things to Consider

The Republic of Ireland occupies about five-sixths of the island of Ireland; Northern Ireland (part of the UK) covers the northeast. For most international travelers, the Republic is the destination - Dublin as the entry point, with circuits either west (Galway, Connemara, the Aran Islands, County Clare, the Cliffs of Moher) or southwest (Cork, Kerry, the Ring of Kerry, Dingle Peninsula). The border between the Republic and Northern Ireland is open and unchecked - the Good Friday Agreement of 1998 and its preservation after Brexit has maintained seamless island travel.

Ireland suits travelers who want pub culture done right (a session with live traditional music in an unselfconscious local pub is one of the better things Europe offers), coastal and landscape scenery in the west and southwest, and literary and cultural depth in the cities. It does not suit travelers expecting guaranteed good weather, cheap costs, or uncrowded famous sites in summer.

Getting There and Around

Dublin Airport (DUB) is the main hub with extensive connections across Europe and North America. Aer Lingus and Ryanair are the main carriers. The 747 Aircoach connects the airport to the city centre in about 30-40 minutes. Cork Airport (ORK) and Shannon Airport (SNN) also receive international flights and are useful for southwest Ireland itineraries.

A rental car is the right choice for anywhere outside Dublin. The west and southwest coasts are the primary reasons most people come to Ireland and they require independent transport - the public bus network (Bus Éireann) exists but is slow and infrequent outside cities. Irish roads in the countryside are narrow, hedge-lined, and require adjustment if you're used to continental driving. Distances are short but driving times are longer than maps suggest. Dublin itself is walkable and has an adequate Luas tram system.

What's Changed Since 2016

Dublin has become significantly more expensive. The housing crisis and cost of living increase that has affected the city since 2016 has made it one of the pricier European capitals - hotel rooms that cost €80-100 in 2016 now run €140-200 or more. The restaurant and bar scene has improved in quality alongside the cost increases; Dublin now has genuinely good cooking, though the old value proposition of cheap Guinness and affordable nights out is largely gone.

The Cliffs of Moher (County Clare) and the Ring of Kerry have developed visitor management infrastructure to handle the summer peak crowds - paid parking, timed entry, and crowd flow systems. The Wild Atlantic Way marketing campaign by Tourism Ireland has successfully promoted the west coast but also concentrated visitor numbers at the most photogenic sites. The Aran Islands (Inis Mór, Inis Meáin, Inis Oírr) remain relatively unspoiled and reward the extra ferry journey.

Ideas to Consider for Your Visit

The pub session - traditional music played informally by musicians gathered in a pub - is genuinely one of the great social experiences in Ireland and should not be confused with 'Irish music nights' marketed at visitors. The real thing happens in towns like Doolin in County Clare, Dingle in Kerry, Ennis, Listowel, and in Dublin at pubs like Mulligan's or The Cobblestone. No stage, musicians arriving and sitting together, tunes going for hours. Turn up, buy a drink, listen.

Connemara in County Galway is among the most distinctive landscapes in Ireland - a combination of bog, mountain, Atlantic coast, and scattered Gaeltacht (Irish-speaking) communities that resists easy categorization. The Connemara Loop from Galway covers it in a day; Clifden is the main town. The Twelve Bens mountains are visible from most of the route. This is the west coast landscape that Ireland's reputation is built on.

The Dingle Peninsula in County Kerry is arguably more rewarding than the Ring of Kerry - less visited, has the Slea Head Drive with Iron Age promontory forts overlooking the Blasket Islands, the Great Blasket Island itself (accessible by ferry in summer), and the town of Dingle with excellent seafood and a particularly good pub scene. Stay a night rather than day-tripping from Killarney.

Realities to Be Aware Of

Ireland uses the euro in the Republic; Northern Ireland uses the pound. Dublin mid-range daily budget: €120-180 per person (hotel, meals, transport). Outside Dublin in the countryside, accommodation and food are more affordable. Pints of Guinness in Dublin run €7-9; the same pint in a country pub in County Clare runs €5-6. Car rental should be booked early, especially for summer - demand exceeds supply and prices spike. June through August is peak season; shoulder seasons (May and September) are better value with comparable weather.

If Ireland Is Part of a Longer Trip

The obvious combination is Ireland and Britain- the ferry from Dublin to Holyhead (Wales, 3.5 hours) or to Pembroke (Wales, 4 hours) connects the islands. An all-island Ireland trip including Northern Ireland (Belfast, the Giant's Causeway, the Causeway Coastal Route) requires no border formalities and covers two politically distinct but geographically unified experiences.

Yearly Things to Consider

Ireland has a maritime climate - cool, wet, and changeable year-round. There is no dry season; rain is possible any month. The difference between summer and winter is primarily in temperature and daylight rather than precipitation. May and September are the most consistent shoulder seasons. Summer (June-August) has the longest days and best weather odds. St Patrick's Day (March 17) is a major event in Dublin, with a week-long festival; book well ahead for accommodation.

January | 46°F (8°C) | 2.7 in | Low | Quiet; some attractions closed; cheapest accommodation
February | 46°F (8°C) | 2.3 in | Low | Still quiet; days lengthening slowly
March | 50°F (10°C) | 2.3 in | Shoulder | St Patrick's Day (March 17); Dublin very busy that week
April | 54°F (12°C) | 2.1 in | Shoulder | Spring; warming; Easter visitors; manageable crowds
May | 59°F (15°C) | 2.5 in | Shoulder | One of the best months; long days; crowds manageable
June | 64°F (18°C) | 2.2 in | High | Peak season begins; long days; busy at major sites
July | 66°F (19°C) | 2.9 in | High | Peak; warmest month; busiest; book ahead
August | 66°F (19°C) | 3.3 in | High | Busiest; bank holiday weekend very crowded
September | 61°F (16°C) | 3.0 in | Shoulder | Excellent; crowds dropping; good value
October | 54°F (12°C) | 3.2 in | Low | Autumn; quieter; Halloween (All Hallows) in Derry
November | 49°F (9°C) | 3.1 in | Low | Quiet; low prices; wet and grey
December | 46°F (8°C) | 2.8 in | Low | Christmas atmosphere in Dublin; cold and wet

Ideas for Itineraries

3 Days in Ireland

Three days is Dublin plus one regional excursion. Two days in Dublin: Trinity College and the Book of Kells in the morning (pre-book tickets), the National Museum, a walk through Merrion Square and Georgian Dublin, Mulligan's or the Stag's Head in the evening. Day three: drive or bus to the Wicklow Mountains and Glendalough (1.5 hours south) for an ancient monastic site in a glacial valley, then return to Dublin.

5 Days in Ireland

Add a western loop. Dublin two nights, Galway two nights (ferry to Inis Mór for the day from Galway, or the Connemara Loop by car), then back to Dublin or fly from Galway. Alternatively Dublin to Cork by train (2.5 hours), base in Cork for the southwest - the English Market, the Butter Museum, day trips to Kinsale and Cobh.

1 Week in Ireland

A week allows a proper circuit. Dublin two nights, west to Galway by train (2.5 hours), Connemara and Aran Islands two nights, south through County Clare (Doolin and the Cliffs of Moher), Kerry (Dingle Peninsula or Ring of Kerry), Cork for the final night, fly home from Cork or back to Dublin by train. This is the classic Ireland circuit and it works because the country is small enough to cover without feeling rushed.

2 Weeks or More in Ireland

Two weeks opens up Northern Ireland (Belfast and the Causeway Coast), Donegal in the northwest (the most remote and least visited county, the most dramatic coastal scenery in Ireland, and the largest Gaeltacht), and more time to stay in places rather than transit through them. Ireland's cottage rental infrastructure (self-catering cottages by the sea or in the hills) is excellent and well-suited to a slower two-week pace. Dublin has a strong expat and digital nomad community with good co-working infrastructure.

Best Time to Visit
May–September
Budget Range
mid-range

Cities in Ireland

Ireland Travel FAQ

The Ring of Kerry is a 179km circular route around the Iveragh Peninsula, famous for mountain and coastal scenery. It's heavily visited in summer (coach buses share the narrow roads with rental cars) and most stops are arranged around organized tourism. Dingle Peninsula (Corca Dhuibhne) to the north is smaller, has the Slea Head Drive with Iron Age sites, the Blasket Island heritage, and the town of Dingle with better restaurants and pubs. Most people who have done both prefer Dingle.

In Dublin city centre, expect €7-9 per pint at most pubs. In the countryside (County Clare, Kerry, Connacht), €5-6.50 is more typical. Temple Bar in Dublin is the most expensive area and is primarily aimed at visitors - avoid it for drinking and head to pubs in the Stoneybatter, Portobello, or Ranelagh neighborhoods for a more local experience and better prices.

Yes, consistently, but rarely in a way that ruins a day. Irish rain is often drizzle, mist, or passing showers rather than sustained heavy rain. The west coast (Connemara, Kerry) is wetter than the east. A good waterproof jacket and the willingness to continue outdoors through light rain is the right approach. The light on a day of mixed sun and showers is beautiful; many photographers prefer it to full sun.

Three islands off the Galway coast: Inis Mór (largest, most visited), Inis Meáin, and Inis Oírr. Inis Mór has the extraordinary Dún Aonghasa promontory fort, standing at the edge of 90-meter cliffs above the Atlantic. Ferries run from Galway city (1.5 hours) and Rossaveal (30 minutes). Day trips work but an overnight on Inis Mór is better - the island feels completely different after the day ferries leave.

A session (seisiún) is informal traditional Irish music - fiddle, tin whistle, uilleann pipes, flute, bodhrán - played by musicians sitting together without a stage or formal performance structure. They happen in pubs, typically two or three nights a week, announced informally. Doolin in County Clare has several pubs known for sessions (McGann's, Gus O'Connor's). The Cobblestone in Dublin's Stoneybatter is a well-known session pub. The Burren region in County Clare, County Mayo, and much of Kerry have regular sessions. Look for handwritten notices in pub windows rather than advertised events.

Ireland Travel Guide | BootsnAll